System and method for mining large, diverse, distributed, and heterogeneous datasets

ABSTRACT

A method for directed mining of a heterogeneous dataset with a computer comprising: populating a rule base with known rules, wherein each rule has a context and a situation; populating a case base with known cases, wherein each case has a context and a situation, and wherein the case base is partitioned from the rule base; ascribing a natural language semantics to predicates of the known cases and rules; randomly transforming the known rules and the known cases to form new rules by extracting a maximum number of common predicates; segmenting the rules and the cases on the basis of shared predicates without making distinction between context and situation predicates; abducing new knowledge from the dataset by fuzzily matching the context of a new rule to a situation the new rule does not cover; and issuing a query to a user to supply missing predicates of the fuzzy match.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION

This application is a continuation-in-part of prior U.S. applicationSer. No.: 13/734,669, filed 4 Jan. 2013, titled “Case-Based ReasoningSystem Using Case Generalization Method” (Navy Case #101366); which is acontinuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No. 12/755,268, U.S. Pat.No. 8,447,720, issued 21 May 2013, titled “Adaptive Case-Based ReasoningSystem Using Dynamic Method for Knowledge Acquisition” (Navy Case#100222); both of which applications are hereby incorporated byreference herein in their entirety for their teachings.

FEDERALLY-SPONSORED RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT

The United States Government has ownership rights in this invention.Licensing and technical inquiries may be directed to the Office ofResearch and Technical Applications, Space and Naval Warfare SystemsCenter, Pacific, Code 72120, San Diego, Calif., 92152; voice (619)553-5118; ssc_pac_t2@navy.mil. Reference Navy Case Number 101517.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

There is an outstanding problem in artificial intelligence of how toapply commonsense knowledge to transform domain-specific knowledge so asto adapt it to current problem-solving needs as defined by a suppliedcontext. Expert systems are currently used for the application ofdomain-specific knowledge for the solution of complex problems. However,they are brittle, cannot get too large or they become too costly tomaintain, and cannot effectively apply commonsense reasoning.

SUMMARY

Described herein is a method for directed mining of a heterogeneousdataset with a computer. The first step provides for populating a rulebase with known rules, wherein each rule has a context and a situation.The next step provides for populating a case base with known cases,wherein each case has a context and a situation, and wherein the casebase is partitioned from the rule base. The next step provides forascribing a natural language semantics to predicates of the known casesand rules. The next step provides for randomly transforming the knownrules and the known cases to form new rules by extracting a maximumnumber of common predicates. The next step provides for segmenting therules and the cases on the basis of shared predicates without makingdistinction between context and situation predicates. The next stepprovides for abducing new knowledge from the dataset by fuzzily matchingthe context of a new rule to a situation the new rule does not cover.The last step provides for issuing a query to a user to supply missingpredicates of the fuzzy match.

The method for directed mining of a heterogeneous dataset describedherein may also be described as comprising the following steps. Step oneprovides for dividing the dataset into domain-specific segments, eachsegment stored on a separate processor, wherein each segment comprisesproductions that are partitioned into rule and case bases, and whereineach production comprises a context predicated by a situation and viceversa. Step two provides for creating a shared symbolic predicateinterpretation lookup table in each segment that includes primitivesymbols and their sequences, context, and situation interpretations.Step three provides for searching a segment by selecting a givenproduction and transforming it by replacing its context with predicateequivalents and then searching the group of segments for a situationcovered by the transformed context. Step four provides for definingrandom and symmetric quantums for each processor, wherein the random andsymmetric quantums represent the exclusive time spent in performingrandom and symmetric searches respectively in a most-recently-successfulrule discovery, per processor. Step five provides for initializing bothquantums in each processor to the same value so as to preserve fairnessand prevent thrashing. Step six provides for terminating search prior toquantum expiration if no situation is found to be applicable. Step sevenprovides for alternating search in each processor between symmetric andrandom search proportionately favoring the type of search having theshorter quantum, wherein ties are broken at uniform chance. Step eightprovides for updating the quantums if the transformed context covers, orfuzzily matches upon interrupt, a given situation in one of theprocessors and if a likelihood of the combination of the transformedcontext and the given situation is within a possibility squelch, whereinthe possibility of the combination of the transformed context and thegiven situation is the product of the possibility of each transform inthe combination. Step nine provides for adding the transformed contextand the covered situation as a new rule to the logical head of the rulebase of those segment(s) having maximal cohesion subject to relation.Step ten provides for taking the cases and/or rules having the highestone-step possibilities, and issuing questions/queries to a user as tothe status of their unmatched situational predicates if, upontimer/quantum interrupt, a complete covering of a situation in a segmentis not found. Step eleven provides for expunging all cases and rulesthat are found to be in error. Step twelve provides for expunging theleast-recently-used (LRU) cases and rules in a segment to free storagespace as necessary. Step thirteen provides for maintaining in eachsegment a local stacking mechanism for excluding cycles intransformation by checking for duplicate states whenever a transformedcontext and transform is to be stacked. Step fourteen provides forchecking the final results of locally acyclic and successfultransformations against the contents of every segment to insure that itis unknown. Step fifteen provides for moving to the tail of itscontaining segment any transform, which gave rise to a duplicate state.Step sixteen provides for terminating the stacking mechanism uponinterrupt, or failure to find a randomization within cumulativelikelihood within the possibility squelch. Step seventeen provides forproviding the acyclic contexts, transformations, and transformedcontexts, on the segment stacks, as sequential metaphoricalexplanations.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

Throughout the several views, like elements are referenced using likereferences. The elements in the figures are not drawn to scale and somedimensions are exaggerated for clarity.

FIG. 1 is a flowchart of a method for directed mining of a heterogeneousdataset.

FIG. 2 is a graphical and textual illustration of method 10.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS

FIG. 1 is a flowchart for a method 10 for directed mining of aheterogeneous dataset comprising, consisting of, or consistingessentially of steps 10 _(a) through 10 _(g). Step 10 _(a) provides forpopulating a rule base with known rules, wherein each rule has a contextand a situation. Step 10 _(b) provides for populating a case base withknown cases, wherein each case has a context and a situation, andwherein the case base is partitioned from the rule base. Step 10 _(c)provides for ascribing a natural language semantics to predicates of theknown cases and rules. Step 10 _(d) provides for randomly transformingthe known rules and the known cases to form new rules by extracting amaximum number of common predicates. Step 10 _(e) provides forsegmenting the rules and the cases on the basis of shared predicateswithout making distinction between context and situation predicates.Step 10 _(f) provides for abducing new knowledge from the dataset byfuzzily matching the context of a new rule to a situation the new ruledoes not cover. Step 10 _(g) provides for issuing a query to a user tosupply missing predicates of the fuzzy match.

Method 10 allows antecedent sets and consequent sequences to havedistinct interpretations (i.e., duality), which enables the iterativerandomization of knowledge. Method 10 also provides for the automaticsegmentation of all knowledge for use in conjunction with massivelyparallel processors. This increases the practical density of knowledge,which may be stored in a finite memory space by expungingleast-recently-used (LRU) compatible knowledge. Moreover, method 10provides a possibility squelch for selecting among competing actions,question asking, and fuzzy predicate matching for the definition of asynthetic intelligence. Knowledge may be partitioned on the basis ofwhether it is a case, or a rule. Method 10 can

Method 10 benefits from a heuristic framework that learns to direct themining of structured and unstructured datasets and converges onproviding knowledge arrived at by process of abduction from prior data.This knowledge necessarily includes features, objects, entities,activities, patterns of interest, and relationships. Abduction allowsfor the generation of questions/queries to extract missing predicateinformation. A possibility metric may be provided for each productionwhich cumulatively tracks the similarity of the context and a selectedproduction's antecedent. Each context may be associated with a minimumpossibility metric so that no production below threshold may fire.Possibilities of error may be used to incorporate uncertainty andimprecision. The rule space converges on making the proper decisions.

Often, the supplied data is missing key attributes (i.e.,incompleteness). These attributes are needed to increase the certaintyof a decision output. Method 10 can acquire these attributes by processof abduction. All, none, or some of these attributes need to bevalidated, invalidated, or not decided upon (by default) by the userand/or an external system. Such feedback will amplify systemcapabilities. This follows because as the rule base grows, the potentialfor generalization and abduction grows too. Random and symmetricsearches may be integrated to ensure broad coverage of the search space.The transformed context may be fuzzily matched to a situation, which itdoes not cover. This may be done to increase the systems predictivecapability. Contradictory data may be resolved through the use ofheuristics.

Method 10's methodology for rule mining can be applied to mining rulesthat direct the mining of other rules (i.e., including the mining of themining rules, or self-reference). This is needed for scalability. Casesand rules are stored in segments so as to maximize their coherency(i.e., domain-specificity) across parallel processors. Less usefulknowledge is expunged in keeping with this policy. This defines adynamic distributed model over several (numerous) integrated knowledgebases.

Healthcare is just one of many industries that are using or will makeuse of tools, such as method 10 that can rapidly analyze information.Emergency preparedness, terrorism detection, and fraud detection are alllikely to follow quickly. As described below, method 10 may be used todeal with a plethora of heterogeneous data from multiple sources.Knowledge begets knowledge. Thus, data mining method 10 is directed (thecolloquial term for knowledge-based mining). The focus of method 10 isto techniques using abduction for acquiring knowledge for directedmining. This is because this technique applies to the randomization ofcases into rules just as it applies to the mining of datasets. It isthus self-referential and scalable as a consequence.

The knowledge serving directed mining is acquired by method 10 throughthe use of heuristics. Heuristics are needed to best learn from massivedata that may be uncertain, incomplete, imprecise, and/or contradictory.The use of abduction for the extension of knowledge bases is fundamentalto the mining of large datasets—independent of the number of assignedparallel processors. This follows again because parallel processors canat best reduce computational time by a linear factor; whereas, thecomplexity inherent to undirected mining grows exponentially with thenumber of variables. Method 10 defines an adaptive self-referentialsystem, which is measurably faster precisely because heuristics need notbe exact.

Theoretically, it may be proven that a particular model for machinelearning is more powerful than another because it is capable ofrepresenting more complex curves or functions. While this may be true(e.g., for neural networks having hidden layers), in practice one may besurprised that a learning system using a theoretically less powerfulrepresentation may yield better predictions than one with a potentiallystronger representation. Even the fastest neural networks, using thek-nearest neighbor (KNN) or radial basis function (RBF) models realizedin expandable hardware, cannot scale to massive datasets. This isbecause the shape of the decision space, modeled as examples, requirespotentially intractable iterative re-learning. This, in turn, opens thedoor for symbolic and heuristic methods—including those based onanalogy, and in general those for which search results are inadmissible.Often heuristic power can be gained at the expense of admissibility(i.e., the guarantee of finding an optimal solution whenever oneexists).

All knowledge can be characterized as random or symmetric. Randomizationreduces data or knowledge to a more general form. Not only is this formmore reusable; but as a consequence, it can be more widely applied inthe transformation of knowledge to create symmetric (analogical)knowledge. This will be shown below. The acquisition of random orsymmetric knowledge serves to increase the scope of the knowledge base.This serves to increase its latent intelligence as well. Furthermore, itfollows that since all knowledge can be characterized as some dynamiccombination of randomness and symmetry that the system proposed hereinfor knowledge generation has the theoretical potential to emulate humancreativity and thought.

There are machine learning techniques that work in the small, but do notscale. The reason is that in the small one can afford the luxury ofperforming exhaustive or near exhaustive search. However, as the datasetsize grows linearly, the complexity of mining it grows exponentially.Thus, parallel processing is never a suitable hedge here. Only knowledgecan offset the rapidly growing complexity and that is why directedmining methods, appropriate for the processing of massive datasets, areneeded.

Once you setup specific conditions for the qualifier, you essentiallyrender it domain specific. Sometimes these conditions can be verysubtle. Consider for example, “Some clocks don't keep accurate time.”This differs from, “There exists clocks, which don't keep accuratetime.” In the latter, satisfaction of the “there exists” clause allowsflexibility in the definition of “accurate”. However, in the former,such flexibility is not available because the scope of “some” isdomain-specific. Does accuracy refer to minutes, seconds, ormicroseconds in the case of atomic clocks? One can't know because thisis domain-specific knowledge. The only way to acquire knowledge withscale is to make the search for it knowledge-based, self-referential,and inadmissible. This illustrates three fundamental (yet generallyunrecognized) shortcomings of the predicate calculus for which method 10offers remedy.

Data embodies facts and relationships, which need to be mined withminimal chance of error. The knowledge-based component of a directedmining operation likewise needs to be mined with minimal chance oferror. The mining knowledge and the applicative domain knowledge arejust different instances of knowledge. Method 10, described in detailbellow, applies equally well to both, where the former guides the miningof the latter. Furthermore, the mining knowledge can apply to itself toaccelerate learning of the application domain.

The application domain may be broadly characterized. It may consist ofsmall datasets of any type. More importantly, it may also comprisemassive distributed heterogeneous datasets, which embed nuggets ofknowledge. These nuggets are more general than the dataset(s) from whichthey are derived. They form loss or lossless randomizations. Lossrandomizations typically achieve the greatest compression ofinformation, but may contradict more or less of the associated data.Lossless randomizations are simply more compact than the associateddata; but, they may not be in contradiction with any of it.

Embodiments of method 10 allow for loss randomization. Loss may occur inthe computation of the possibility for use by the inference engine inmatching the nearest cases and rules—see below. A loss randomization maybecome lossless if all missing predicate information is retrievedthrough question/query. The meteorological and oceanographic (METOC)domain of weather prediction is used below to illustrate method 10. Thisis done both to enhance the clarity of exposition as well as to minimizeany unfamiliarity with the domain on the part of the reader. It is donewithout loss of generality in the results. However, it is to beunderstood that method 10 may be applied to any heterogeneous datasetand is not limited to the METOC domain.

Method 10 may utilize a learning, natural-language-processing systemsuch as the one disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 8,447,720, which is referredto hereafter as the '720 system. The '720 system can learn to mapheterogeneous data onto generalized qualitative descriptors. Forexample, “the barometer fell by 1.3 inches of mercury in the last hour,”might be mapped to, “the barometer is falling very fast”. Similarly,method 10 may utilize the '720 system, or its equivalent, to learn tomap the text of mission objectives onto a hierarchical feature set inputso as to replace the current alternative. This involves using an expertsystem to map text to a sequence of context-sensitive tokens. Acase-based reasoning system can then learn to map this to a set ofcontext-free tokens. Method 10 provides empirical results on how totranslate natural language into a form that a qualitative learningsystem can use and vice versa back out.

Suppose that one has heterogeneous dataset(s), which are iterativelymapped by a trained '720 system (or equivalent) to yield the followinggeneralized qualitative descriptors. Let, b

=barometer rising/falling; c=cloudy; f=freezing; w=warm;p=precipitation; r=rain; s=snow; and, 1=clear. Each predicate has aduality in the sense that it has two (possibly distinct)interpretations—as a Boolean predicate and set member if used on theleft-hand side (LHS) and as a sequential action if used on theright-hand side (RHS) of the implication (See Table 1 below). Note thatb↓b↑→Ø (i.e., a domain-specific interpretation) and that b↓↓ isinterpreted to mean that the barometer is falling very fast andsimilarly b↑↑ is interpreted to mean that the barometer is rising veryfast—for an embedded qualitatively fuzzy representation. Capital letterson either side are used, as in grammar theory, to represent nonterminals. Non terminals can represent arbitrarily complex concepts.Terminals are represented by lowercase letters.

Predicate combinations and sequences may also be ascribed meanings Themost-specific predicate sequences are first to be parsed. Table 1provides a few examples. The user enters the context and the systemreplies with the RHS(s) along with a computed possibility of error. Theentered context may or may not appear to be covered by anyknowledge-based transformations. Therein may be found the power ofcontext-sensitive learning. Type 0 transformations can do amazing thingsgiven the opportunity for interaction. Such interaction requires timefor search and must be directed by knowledge to scale successfully.

TABLE 1 Sample Predicate Semantics Minimal Set (LHS) Sequence (RHS)Symbols Interpretation Interpretation b↓↓ l A storm is The barometer isunexpectedly rapidly falling and approaching. it's clear. p p w It'sprecipitating It's raining cats hard and it's and dogs. warm. p r It'spouring. It's pouring.

For purposes of method 10, one may take cases to be at least as specificas rules, which (like all rules) may allow for generalization.Generalization is done to increase applicability. It is accurate tostate that, “Knowledge should be as general as possible, but no moreso”. Consider the following pair of weather cases (1).C1:b↓cw→rC2:b↓cf→s  (1)One can randomize C1 and C2 by extracting the maximum number ofpredicates, which they have in common into a rule. The semantics neednot be known in order to perform this operation. Transformation (2) maybe assumed to already exist in the bases in practice. Thus,R1:b↓c→  (2)Note that although transformations point to the right, it is understoodthat they are bidirectional. This is a result of the allowance for Type0 expansions and contractions. Furthermore, each direction oftransformation incurs independent logical movement. Next, one mayproceed to randomize C1 and C2 by substitution of R1 into them with theresult:R2:pw→rR3:pf→s  (3)At this point, assume that the system acquires the case:C3:b↑c→1  (4)Next, it is supplied with the context, b↓1, which has no literal matchin the case or rule bases thus far. However, by pre-multiplying bothsides of transformation (4) by b↓ one may obtain:R4:b↓1→b↓b↑c(id)→c  (5)Furthermore,R5:p→b↓c(R1)→b↓↓1(R4)  (6)R5 makes conceptual sense. One can substitute R5 for R1 in all candidatederivations.

Notice that any rule, which logically follows, can be derived givensufficient search time without a need to store intermediary rules.However, this practice will not successfully scale to massive datasets.Here, not only are rules often needed in real time; but, the complexityof their interaction can grow exponentially. Method 10 allows forunpromising candidate interactions to be pruned and the remaindersaved—at least temporarily. That is, in method 10, search control isunder heuristic guidance as is explained below where it is shown that aqualitative representation enables heuristic guidance and vice versa inthe abduction of knowledge.

Scalable directed miners necessarily employ large, segmented,distributed, and often heterogeneous knowledge sources. One problemsolved by method 10 pertains to how to pair a context, or state vectorfor the current state of the salient universe, with its closest-matchingsituation. This situation then triggers its associated action and theentire process iterates. Method 10 utilizes a distinctqualitatively-fuzzy (loss) solution to this problem, as discussed below.Suffice it to say for the present that method 10's solution allows forfine-grained massively parallel search. The distributed directed miningof datasets of arbitrary size has no upper time-complexity bound.

The most-general (most-powerful) representational formalism forknowledge is the Type 0 grammar. This formalism is theoreticallyequivalent to the generalized and/or graph (GAG). Here, transformationscan iterate between expansions and contractions. Most importantly, onecan rarely arrive at a globally optimal solution by hill-climbingcontext-free solutions to complex contexts.

Heuristics may take on many different forms. Sometimes they appear asrules of thumb for use in predicting the weather say. Other times, theymay appear as algorithms for use in finding metrics for rankingcandidate cases. Still other times, they may appear as optronic hardware(e.g., SLMs) for the rapid summation of signals, where digital accuracyis not required. Here, heuristics take the form of any useful techniquefor exploiting symmetry in search.

First, search cannot be entirely random, or it will be unnecessarilyslow. Similarly, it cannot be entirely symmetric, or it will beincapable of novel discovery. In method 10, the percentage of time thatsearch is random or symmetric is dynamic and varies with the most-recentrate of success in discovering new knowledge. Method 10 utilizes twoquantums. First, is the random quantum and second is the symmetricquantum. The former dynamically defines the amount of time that aprocessor may spend in the performance of uniform search for newknowledge. The latter dynamically defines the amount of time that aprocessor may spend in the performance of skewed search for newknowledge. When the allotted time for chance search (i.e., its randomquantum) expires, the system (context) is switched to say symmetricsearch (i.e., until its symmetric quantum expires), then back to saychance search, and so on. These quantum pairs are locally anddynamically defined for each processor. Search is forcibly terminated,prior to quantum expiration, if no production is found to be applicable.The more successful modality will have the shorter quantum and will beused to kick off the search as defined in each processor. A simpleexample will serve to clarify this concept as follows.

Suppose that the random quantum was of two seconds duration and thesymmetric quantum was of one second duration. Search time is to beallocated in inverse proportion to the most-recent time required fordiscovery. Thus, two-thirds of the time, on average, is to be spentexploring symmetric transformations. One-third of the time, on average,is to be spent exploring random transformations. Notice thatproportionately more time is spent using the most-successful searchmodality and proportionately less time is spent using theless-successful search modality as dynamically defined.

Cases and/or rules may be randomized into rules as previously described.Suppose that random transformation is selected next as previouslydescribed. Here, cases and/or rules are randomly applied to the(resultant) context in an attempt to transform it into an arbitrarycovering of some case and/or rule antecedent. The idea is to transformits syntax while preserving its semantics in order that it will be knownby the local knowledge base segment. After the random quantum or twoseconds elapses, say symmetric transformational search is selected next.This then begins anew for a symmetric quantum, or one second here. Then,if say random transformational search is selected next, processingcontinues for another two seconds, or until the context is successfullymapped. The mapped set must cover (or fuzzily match upon interrupt) asituation of some case and/or rule in some processor segment and have apossibility above the set noise limit, or squelch (the possibilitysquelch is described in further detail below).

If the context were to be successfully mapped after one more secondelapses, then the random quantum is reset to three seconds. This is thesum of random transformational search times that it took to discoverthis transformational sequence map. Otherwise, symmetrictransformational search continues for another symmetric quantum, ifselected, and so on. The lower and upper bounds on quantum timedefinitions are determined to preserve fairness and prevent thrashing,respectively. Again, it can also be the case that no further rules canbe created at this time—in which case this “idle” process is terminatedby an interrupt and fuzzy predicate matching may be applied to find thebest-matching case and/or rule.

Regarding random transformation and symmetric transformation, bothprocesses share the same local list of productions with the effect thatthe random transformations anneal the results of the applied symmetrictransformations. A similar process is sometimes used to keep neuralnetworks from climbing strictly local hills during training. Similarly,a little random knowledge can go a long way towards enabling otherwisesymmetric solutions.

Whenever a random or symmetric transform fires, it is logically moved tothe head of its local list. Symmetric search progresses down from alist's logical head. In random transformation, each transform on thatlist has an equal chance of being selected to see if it is applicable.In symmetric transformation, the visited transform need not only beapplicable, but it must reduce the distance between the context and atleast one situation in the case and/or rule base. Such hill-climbingimplies that the current maximum possibility (See equation (7) below)must increase over the previous maximum possibility (i.e., over at leastone among all situations in the segmented bases). As a conceptualexample, suppose that the context were {b↓c w}. R1 would transform thisto {p w}, which covers the situation for R2 by increasing the number ofmatched predicates here to two. (The possibility increases from 0.25 to1.0 as will be defined below.)

Again, the maximum possibility needs to increase after the applicationof each symmetric transform. This is because the time consumed if thepossibility increase needed to only occur after the application of twoor more sequential symmetric transforms (i.e., making it k-limited)proportionately negates the speedup otherwise afforded by symmetricsearch. Also, the annealing associated with random transformation servesto vary the applicable sequence. This does not sacrifice the speedcharacterizing symmetric search.

Moreover, the sequence of transformations can serve as a metaphoricalexplanation. This tells how the context was transformed to fully orpartially cover some best-found situation. Indeed, one of the reasonsexpert systems are preferred over neural networks in practice is thatthey offer at least a conventional explanation subsystem. The context,transformation, and transformed context are iteratively stacked.

Method 10 provides a technique to find the maximally covered case and/orrule for a given context, which cannot be mapped to a complete coveringupon timer interrupt (i.e., loss randomization). Also, the method 10 canask questions or issue queries to determine the states of the criticalmissing predicates. For example, R1 maps the context, {b↓c} to p. Thisonly partially covers the situations for R2 or R3, which are {p w} and{p f}, respectively. Here, the system may issue the query as to whetherit is warm or freezing before issuing the prediction for rain or snow byfiring R2 or R3, respectively. Even without this information, a closestmatch can be had along with an issuance of the possibility for error.

The relative possibility for a particular action with regard to a givencontext is defined by

$\begin{matrix}{{{{possibility}\mspace{14mu}(i)} = \frac{{{context}\bigcap{situation}_{i}}}{{{context}\bigcup{situation}_{i}}}},} & (7)\end{matrix}$where possibility (i)ε[0,1]. Temporal locality is used to break ties(i.e., where the logically highest situation, in a particular segment,is deemed to best match the context). A case and/or rule must havegreater than a zero possibility and exceed its squelch threshold to beapplied. The possibility for the result of the application of a sequenceof cases and/or rules is the product of the possibilities at each stepin the sequence. The possibility is a metric for the reliability of theaction produced by a given context. A transformative sequence may beselected to produce the maximal possibility. Conversely, if a particularaction has more than one associated possibility, the greatestpossibility is the one ascribed, since it has a preferred derivation.Possibilities can be experientially linked to likelihoods as shown inTable 2.

TABLE 2 Possibilities (P) Linked to Likelihoods Lower P Upper PLikelihood 1.00 1.00 Certainty 0.76 0.99 Very Likely 0.51 0.75 Likely0.26 0.50 Unlikely 0.01 0.25 Very Unlikely 0.00 0.00 Impossible

Next, suppose that the complete context is given as {b↓c r}. Thiscontext is processed by the three cases in the case base and the fiverules in the rule base as follows. Here, the cases and rules arecodified for ease of reference and review:C1:b↓cw→rC2:b↓cf→sC3:b↑c→1R1:b↓c→pR2:pw→rR3:pf→sR4:b↓l→b↓b↑c(C3)→cR5:p→b↓c(R1)→b↓↓l  (8)Now, let a specific context be given by:b↓cr(R2)→b↓cpw(R1)→ppw(R2)→pr  (9)A less complex randomization having a greater possibility, which may bediscovered through parallel search, is given by:b↓cr(R1)→pr  (10)One can assume that the context (9) is maximally randomized (i.e., hasthe fewest predicate terms) using the given number of processors in theavailable timeframe. Transformation (10) illustrates the inherentnecessity of (heuristic) search in finding less complex randomizations.Sometimes, a more complex randomization will result in a maximalrandomization, which results in the greatest possibility.

The three case possibilities and five rule possibilities are as follows.Note that consecutive duplicate terms define a superset (more extreme)term; whereas, they are otherwise treated as in traditional set theory.Thus, {p p}∩{p}={p} and {p p}∪{p}={p p}. However, {p w p}∩{p}={p} and {pw p}∪{p}={p w}. It is helpful to observe that |{p p}|=|{p}|=1. Also, |{. . . }| refers to the cardinality of a set. For example, |{ }|=0, |{p pw}|=2,|{p p b↓c w}|=4, and |{p p w b↓c f}=5.

As one moves to the right of transformation (9), the cumulativepossibility (i.e., the product of possibilities after eachtransformation) is non-increasing. For example, R2 is found to have thebest situational match for the transformed context {p p w} (having aone-step possibility of 1.0—see (11)). Of course, R1 would have beentaken as the first and only transformation (10). Here, one may see thatthe search heuristic itself can be inadmissible with the same result.Thus, the best action to associate with it precipitating hard and beingwarm is that it's pouring (Table 1). This can be verified fromtransformations (9) or (10). Notice that given the context that it hasrained, the methodology of method 10 has correctly concluded that it iswarm by process of abduction.

Moving one final step to the right of transformations (9) or (10), onefinds that R5 has the best situational match for the transformedcontext, {p r} (having a one-step possibility of 0.5—see (12). Thisfollows because it has the greatest possibility among its contenders atthis stage of transformation. Thus, the best causality to associate withit pouring (i.e., {p r}) is that the barometer is falling very fast andit is currently clear (i.e., (b↓↓1)). This simple hypothesis can bemanually verified from the knowledge base (8). Notice that given thecontext that it is pouring, the method has effectively concluded thatpossibly the barometer was falling very fast and it was clear by processof abduction. While R5 is covered by this randomized context, the methodworks equally well where this is not the case.

$\begin{matrix}\begin{matrix}\begin{matrix}\begin{matrix}\begin{matrix}\begin{matrix}\begin{matrix}\begin{matrix}{{C\; 1\text{:}\mspace{14mu}\frac{{\left\{ {ppw} \right\}\bigcap\left\{ b\downarrow{cw} \right\}}}{{\left\{ {ppw} \right\}\bigcup\left\{ b\downarrow{cw} \right\}}}} = {\frac{\left\{ w \right\} }{\left\{ {ppb}\downarrow{cw} \right\} } = 0.25}} \\{{C\; 2\text{:}\mspace{14mu}\frac{{\left\{ {ppw} \right\}\bigcap\left\{ b\downarrow{cf} \right\}}}{{\left\{ {ppw} \right\}\bigcup\left\{ b\downarrow{cf} \right\}}}} = {\frac{{\{\}}}{\left\{ {ppwb}\downarrow{cf} \right\} } = 0}}\end{matrix} \\{{C\; 3\text{:}\mspace{14mu}\frac{{\left\{ {ppw} \right\}\bigcap\left\{ b\uparrow c \right\}}}{{\left\{ {ppw} \right\}\bigcup\left\{ b\uparrow c \right\}}}} = {\frac{{\{\}}}{\left\{ {ppwb}\uparrow c \right\} } = 0}}\end{matrix} \\{{R\; 1\text{:}\mspace{14mu}\frac{{\left\{ {ppw} \right\}\bigcap\left\{ b\downarrow c \right\}}}{{\left\{ {ppw} \right\}\bigcup\left\{ b\downarrow c \right\}}}} = {\frac{{\{\}}}{\left\{ {ppwb}\downarrow c \right\} } = 0}}\end{matrix} \\{{R\; 2\text{:}\mspace{14mu}\frac{{\left\{ {ppw} \right\}\bigcap\left\{ {pw} \right\}}}{{\left\{ {ppw} \right\}\bigcup\left\{ {pw} \right\}}}} = {\frac{\left\{ {pw} \right\} }{\left\{ {ppw} \right\} } = 1.0}}\end{matrix} \\{{R\; 3\text{:}\mspace{14mu}\frac{{\left\{ {ppw} \right\}\bigcap\left\{ {pf} \right\}}}{{\left\{ {ppw} \right\}\bigcup\left\{ {pf} \right\}}}} = {\frac{\left\{ p \right\} }{\left\{ {ppwf} \right\} } = 0.333}}\end{matrix} \\{{R\; 4\text{:}\mspace{14mu}\frac{{\left\{ {ppw} \right\}\bigcap\left\{ b\downarrow l \right\}}}{{\left\{ {ppw} \right\}\bigcup\left\{ b\downarrow l \right\}}}} = {\frac{{\{\}}}{\left\{ {ppwb}\downarrow l \right\} } = 0}}\end{matrix} \\{{R\; 5\text{:}\mspace{14mu}\frac{{\left\{ {ppw} \right\}\bigcap\left\{ p \right\}}}{{\left\{ {ppw} \right\}\bigcup\left\{ p \right\}}}} = {\frac{\left\{ p \right\} }{\left\{ {ppw} \right\} } = 0.5}}\end{matrix} & (11)\end{matrix}$

Again, as the number of applied transformations increases, theassociated possibilities are non-increasing (i.e., and converging ontheir true values). This allows for the production of alternativeactions in order of non-increasing possibilities for adjudication. Thesepossibilities may be squelched and only those within that squelch, ifany, may be predicted as being correct alternative action(s). The propersettings for the squelches are domain specific. All cases and/or rulesfound to be in error may be expunged and correct cases acquired, wherethe corrections are known. It follows that since the context israndomized at time t, any action triggered by it can similarly berandomized at the same time. This randomized pairing comprises a newrule, of potentially great utility. It is to be non-redundantly acquiredat the logical head of the segment(s) having maximal cohesion (seebelow). The LRU cases and/or rules will be expunged to free storagespace, as necessary. Here, search is focused on finding domain-specificknowledge when and where it is needed.

Notice that R1 has a possibility of 0 in (12). At first, this seems tobe a contradiction because after all, the context states that it israining. On closer examination, one may see that the reason for thisseeming mishap is that the numerator intersects the situation, b↓cinstead of its randomization, p, which would yield a possibility of 0.5.This follows because the context has already been randomized by R1 intransformations (9) or (10). In general, many more transformations andreverse (i.e., inverse) transformations would be explored.

$\begin{matrix}\begin{matrix}\begin{matrix}\begin{matrix}\begin{matrix}\begin{matrix}\begin{matrix}\begin{matrix}{{C\; 1\text{:}\mspace{14mu}\frac{{\left\{ {pr} \right\}\bigcap\left\{ b\downarrow{cw} \right\}}}{{\left\{ {pr} \right\}\bigcup\left\{ b\downarrow{cw} \right\}}}} = {\frac{{\{\}}}{\left\{ {prb}\downarrow{cw} \right\} } = 0}} \\{{C\; 2\text{:}\mspace{14mu}\frac{{\left\{ {pr} \right\}\bigcap\left\{ b\downarrow{cf} \right\}}}{{\left\{ {pr} \right\}\bigcup\left\{ b\downarrow{cf} \right\}}}} = {\frac{{\{\}}}{\left\{ {prb}\downarrow{cf} \right\} } = 0}}\end{matrix} \\{{C\; 3\text{:}\mspace{14mu}\frac{{\left\{ {pr} \right\}\bigcap\left\{ b\uparrow c \right\}}}{{\left\{ {pr} \right\}\bigcup\left\{ b\uparrow c \right\}}}} = {\frac{{\{\}}}{\left\{ {prb}\uparrow c \right\} } = 0}}\end{matrix} \\{{R\; 1\text{:}\mspace{14mu}\frac{{\left\{ {pr} \right\}\bigcap\left\{ b\downarrow c \right\}}}{{\left\{ {pr} \right\}\bigcup\left\{ b\downarrow c \right\}}}} = {\frac{{\{\}}}{\left\{ {prb}\downarrow c \right\} } = 0}}\end{matrix} \\{{R\; 2\text{:}\mspace{14mu}\frac{{\left\{ {pr} \right\}\bigcap\left\{ {pw} \right\}}}{{\left\{ {pr} \right\}\bigcup\left\{ {pw} \right\}}}} = {\frac{\left\{ p \right\} }{\left\{ {prw} \right\} } = 0.333}}\end{matrix} \\{{R\; 3\text{:}\mspace{14mu}\frac{{\left\{ {pr} \right\}\bigcap\left\{ {pf} \right\}}}{{\left\{ {pr} \right\}\bigcup\left\{ {pf} \right\}}}} = {\frac{\left\{ p \right\} }{\left\{ {prf} \right\} } = 0.333}}\end{matrix} \\{{R\; 4\text{:}\mspace{14mu}\frac{{\left\{ {pr} \right\}\bigcap\left\{ b\downarrow l \right\}}}{{\left\{ {pr} \right\}\bigcup\left\{ b\downarrow l \right\}}}} = {\frac{{\{\}}}{\left\{ {prb}\downarrow l \right\} } = 0}}\end{matrix} \\{{R\; 5\text{:}\mspace{14mu}\frac{{\left\{ {pr} \right\}\bigcap\left\{ p \right\}}}{{\left\{ {pr} \right\}\bigcup\left\{ p \right\}}}} = {\frac{\left\{ p \right\} }{\left\{ {pr} \right\} } = 0.5}}\end{matrix} & (12)\end{matrix}$

A system implementing method 10 has the capability to mimic biologicallearners because, at the higher levels at least, biological learnersfunction through the iterative transformation of our internalrepresentations of knowledge. The manner in which biological learners dothis is unknown at the functional level. It is only known to occurthrough post-tetanic potentiation at the neuronal level.

Method 10 can match fuzzy predicates, generate questions/queries toelicit needed information, segment knowledge on the basis of domainspecificity, autonomously transfer knowledge between domain-specificsegments, generate interrupts and squelches, and evaluate its ownlearning performance through the use of cumulative possibilities. Again,this is because of its capability for self-referential transformation.This somewhat abstract theoretical capability cannot simply be cursorilydismissed. Not only does it serve as the foundation for computabilitytheory, but by definition must segregate intelligent from trivialnon-scalable behaviors.

Each segment will maintain a local stacking mechanism for excludingcycles in transformation. This will be accomplished by checking forduplicate states whenever a transformed context (and transform) is to bestacked. Cases and/or rules, in distinct segments, may act upon the same(transformed) context at any time. The final results of such locallyacyclic (successful) transformations are checked against the contents ofevery segment to ensure that they are unknown. The cases and/or rulesare acquired by the most-cohesive segment(s) (see relations (13) and(14) below) in the event that they are globally unknown.

Otherwise, the duplicate state is popped (expunged) from the localstack. Moreover, the entire local stack is cleared to minimize thechance of revisiting this duplicate state. Logically moved rules areallowed to remain as placed as they serve to anneal the symmetric list.Any transform, which gave rise to a duplicate state, is logically movedto the tail of its containing segment to minimize the chance of arecurrence. The stacking mechanism is terminated upon interrupt. Again,duplicate states are checked for whenever a transformed context is to bestacked. This ensures that the transformative sequence is acyclic. Italso precludes redundancies from unnecessarily increasing the length oftransformation. This would result in an unwarranted reduction in thetrue possibility of the result.

FIG. 2 is a graphical and textual illustration of method 10. As shown,cases and/or rules need to be stored in cohesive units—called segments12. A segment is assigned one or more co-processors. Moreover, segmentsare integrated into groups 14. For example, one segment might containcases and rules for predicting the weather, another might contain casesand rules for planning a mission, and still another might containknowledge pertaining to appropriate combinations of sensors to deploy.The weather-prediction segment can form a group with themission-planning segment and/or the sensor-deployment segment.

Successful randomization requires that cases and/or rules be segmentedon the basis of shared predicates. Here, no distinction is to be madebetween LHS and RHS predicates as a result of duality. Sometimesknowledge can be transferred (e.g., by analogy) between segments. Suchtransference is far more likely to occur when the segments reside in thesame group (i.e., direct or one-step transference).

LRU cases and/or rules are expunged to free space as needed. If thecases and/or rules are maintained together in a linked list in eachsegment, then the case and/or rule of minimal utility will be first tobe expunged. This is because the determination of a cases and/or rulesrelative frequency of use within a segment is compatible with that forother resident cases and/or rules in the same segment. Moreover, thelikelihood of evolving (bidirectional non deterministic) productions,which share a common consequent or common antecedent, in the samesegment, is then proportionately greater.

Cases and/or rules are to be non-redundantly acquired by all segmentshaving maximal cohesion, where

$\begin{matrix}{{cohesion} = \frac{p_{common}}{p_{total}}} & (13)\end{matrix}$such that, p_(common) is the number of predicates in the segment, whichare in common with the case and/or rule to be acquired and p_(total) isi the total number of predicates in the segment. The cohesion ε[0,1].Zero represents perfect incoherency, while unity represents perfectcoherency. The case and/or rule is/are to be acquired by all segments,which have maximal cohesion such that never more than one copy persegment is acquired. Two distinct segments, i and max are said to havemaximal cohesion just in case, max has the greatest cohesion, equation(13), andcohesion_(i)+δ≧cohesion_(max), 0≦δ≦1  (14)for all segments i, where δ is an appropriately set constant. Setting itto zero minimizes the number of segments that will contain a copy of thecase and/or rule; whereas, setting it larger will proportionatelyincrease the redundancy. Every segment will contain a copy of the caseand/or rule if δ is set to unity. The greater the redundancy, thegreater the number of symmetric rules that will be induced, but thegreater the attendant spatial and temporal inefficiencies as well (e.g.,remnants of expunged rules may linger). The case and/or rule is/are tobe saved in those segment(s) having maximal cohesion subject to relation(14). In general, δ should be set to double the total storagerequirements from if it were set to zero. This is predicated onwell-known results for optimizing the performance of hash tables.

As segments grow, they will eventually fully occupy the local spaceafforded their processor(s). At this point, if additional segments(i.e., processors) are not available, then the LRU cases and/or rulesare expunged to make room for the new cases and/or rules. This approachmaximizes segment cohesion by expunging less useful knowledge—therebypreventing the fragmentation of new knowledge to be acquired.

Again, the number of segments may grow too large to enable thepreviously described exhaustive search for the maximally cohesivesegments for the acquisition of a case and/or rule. This is practicallydue to contention on the bus and/or memory as well as driverlimitations. In this event, segments need to be grouped and globalsearch limited to the local groups. Segments should be placed in thesame group just in case they share the same or closely related subjectmatter. The similarity metric for two arbitrary segments, s_(i) ands_(j), is computed using a formula that is similar to the formula usedto compute the possibility metric in equation (7); namely,

$\begin{matrix}{{{{similarity}\left( {i,j} \right)} = \frac{{s_{i}\bigcap s_{j}}}{{s_{i}\bigcup s_{j}}}},} & (15)\end{matrix}$where similarity (i,j)ε[0,1] with zero representing maximally dissimilarsegments and unity representing maximally similar segments. Segmentsshould be grouped to maximize the similarity between each pairing ofsegments in each group. There are O(n²) such pairs, where n is thenumber of segments. This is the complexity if groups are limited to twosegments each. If that limit is raised to three segments each, then thenumber of combinations is given by

${\frac{n!}{{r!}{\left( {n - r} \right)!}} = \frac{{n\left( {n - 1} \right)}\left( {n - 2} \right)}{6}},$where r is the number of segments in a group. This is of O(n³)complexity and so on for higher-order groups. It clearly implies theneed for a heuristic means to accomplish grouping in practice.

Thus, groups are determined on the basis of physical locality. That is,the physical distance separating an arbitrary pair of processors needsto be weighted by the frequency of communication between them. This isdone to minimize the mean latency. The number of segments in a group isdetermined by the number of processors and the capability for concurrentsearch among them. Very large systems may incorporate the physicalmigration of segments into groups. The graphical illustration of theembodiment of method 10 depicted in FIG. 2 is presented below inalgorithmic form.

A. Context-Sensitive Learning

-   -   1. Create a shared symbolic predicate interpretation lookup        table in each segment. This includes primitive symbols and their        sequences, LHS, and RHS interpretations (See Table 1).        B. On Heuristically Speeding-Up the Mining of Knowledge    -   2. Heterogeneous state variables provide an initial context.    -   3. Define random and symmetric quantums for each processor.    -   4. The random/symmetric quantum is the exclusive time spent in        performing random/symmetric search in the most recent successful        rule discovery, per processor.    -   5. Initialize both quantums to the same value so as to preserve        fairness and prevent thrashing.    -   6. Initialize search using the random quantum.    -   7. Search is terminated, prior to quantum expiration, if no        production is found to be applicable.    -   8. Search in each processor alternates—proportionately favoring        the modality having the shorter quantum. Break ties at uniform        chance.    -   9. Apply cases and/or rules to the (resultant) context, where a        successful result updates the quantums. Success implies that the        (transformed) context covers (or fuzzily matches upon interrupt)        a situation in some processor, where the possibility is within        squelch.    -   10. Successfully fired cases and/or rules are logically moved to        the head of their processor list.    -   11. Productions are uniformly chosen to operate left to right        without loss of generality.    -   12. Productions are chosen at uniform chance in random        transformation.    -   13. Productions need not only be applicable, but must reduce the        distance between the context and at least one situation in the        case and/or rule base in symmetric transformation. That is, the        current maximum one-step possibility, equation (7), must        increase over all segments after the application of each        symmetric transform. The test for the applicability of these        transforms progresses down from a segments logical head.        C. Matching Uncertain, Incomplete, Imprecise, and/or        Contradictory Datasets    -   14. If upon timer/quantum interrupt, a complete covering of a        situation in a segment is not found, take the cases and/or rules        having the highest one-step possibilities, equation (7), and        issue questions/queries, if appropriate, as to the status of        their unmatched situational predicates.    -   15. The logically highest situation, in a segment, is the best        match for the context in the event of a tie.    -   16. The final case and/or rule must have greater than a zero        possibility (and be within squelch) to be applied.    -   17. The possibility of a sequence of transforms is the product        of the possibility of each transform in the sequence.    -   18. If an action has more than one associated possibility, the        greatest possibility is the one ascribed.    -   19. Actions are presented, to the user, in non-increasing order        of their possibilities within squelch.    -   20. Possibilities may be translated into likelihoods (Table 2).    -   21. Note: {p p}∩{p}={p} and {p p}∪{p}={p p}. However, {p w        p}∩{p}={p} and {p w p}∪{p}={p w}. It is helpful to observe that        |{p p}|=|{p}|=1.    -   22. All cases and/or rules found to be in error are expunged        and/or (more-specific) correct cases and/or rules are acquired,        where the corrections are known. The randomized actions are        paired with the original supplied context. They are acquired at        the logical head of the segment(s) having maximal cohesion,        equation (13). The case and/or rule is to be saved in those        segment(s) having maximal cohesion subject to relation (14). In        general, (δ should be set to double the total storage        requirements from if it were set to zero.    -   23. The LRU cases and/or rules, in a segment, are expunged to        free storage space, as necessary.        D. On Parallel Processing    -   24. Each segment maintains a local stacking mechanism for        excluding cycles in transformation by checking for duplicate        states whenever a transformed context (and transform) is to be        stacked.    -   25. The final results of such locally acyclic (successful)        transformations are checked against the contents of every        segment (segment local to its group) to insure that it is        unknown.    -   26. The case and/or rule is acquired by the most-cohesive        segment(s), relations (13) (14), in the event that it is locally        unknown.    -   27. Otherwise, the entire local stack is cleared.    -   28. Any transform, which gave rise to a duplicate state, is        logically moved to the tail of its containing segment.    -   29. Terminate the stacking mechanism upon interrupt, or failure        to find a (further) randomization within cumulative squelch.    -   30. The acyclic contexts, transformations, and transformed        contexts, on the segment stacks, serve as sequential        metaphorical explanations.        E. Distributed Segmentation    -   31. Cases and rules are separately linked in each segment though        they share a common LRU link to free space.    -   32. Groups are determined by collecting maximally similar        segments. This may be dynamically determined on the heuristic        basis of physical locality.    -   33. The number of segments in a group is determined by the        number of processors and the capability for concurrent search        among them.    -   34. Very large systems may incorporate the physical migration of        segments into groups.

Method 10 may be considered a system of systems that puts forth thatheuristics are needed to scale the knowledge bases that are needed toscale data mining to unprecedented levels. Method 10 tests arepresentation for heuristics using an annealed transformative searchthat is based on randomness and symmetry. It then follows that such anapproach to heuristic generation must be self-referential. The knowledgebases are segmented to enable massively parallel processing (initiallysimulated). Also, this allows for like knowledge to be grouped together.This means that a geometric pattern of processors will evolve foraddressing certain problems (just as the brain has specific areas forperforming specific functions).

Heuristics represent a condensation of the domain-specific knowledgeembodied in minimizing the complexity of the search paradigm. Thisknowledge must, by definition, include heuristics in general. Thisinclusion is necessary for a mathematical fixed point to arise, which inthe case of an indefinite sequence has a random sequence as the image ofits randomization. It follows that in general there can be no such thingas logics for discovery—only heuristic search, including heuristics fordiscovering heuristics, ad infinitum, until a domain-specific fixedpoint is reached.

Heuristic acquisition is inherent to any non-trivial randomization ofknowledge. Let, ƒbe a total computable search function, which maps anarbitrary context, c, to an arbitrary case antecedent, a, where c and aare state vectors. Maps are differentiated from equivalences through theuse of implication signs (→). Then,

$\begin{matrix}{{f(c)} = \left( {\begin{matrix}{a,} & {{{{if}\mspace{14mu}{{{f(c)} - a}}} < \delta};} \\{{N\; I\; L},} & {{otherwise}.}\end{matrix};} \right.} & (16)\end{matrix}$where the indicated norm defines a qualitatively fuzzy match. Next, letg(a)→b and ƒ(c)→h(b), where b is an arbitrary state vector; g and h aretotal computable functions; and, g⁻¹ may not substitute for h, where itexists, because 0<δ. Note that the use of the function h in h(b) denotesthe case adaptation (randomization) problem, which is as yet unsolved inthe open literature for the general case. One may write, ƒ(c)→h(g(a)),and since g and h are total computable functions, it follows that

$\begin{matrix}{a->\left( {\begin{matrix}{{k(a)},} & {{{{if}\mspace{14mu}{{{f(c)} - a}}} < \delta};} \\{\bot,} & {{otherwise}.}\end{matrix},} \right.} & (17)\end{matrix}$where k is the total computable composition, h∘g. Now, where δ isarbitrarily large, one may write, a→k(a), a≠k(a). Next, define F to be aFunction of Functions such that F={ƒ₀, ƒ₁, . . . , ƒ_(n)}. It should beclear that one can write, F→g(F), where g is a redefined totalcomputable function. Then, through the use of pairing and projectionfunctions, one may equivalently write, ƒ→g(ƒ), ƒ≠g(ƒ). Observe that,a→ƒ(a) and a→g(ƒ(a)), where ƒ is a redefined total computable function.Thus, it follows that there must be inherent non determinism in ageneral case adaptation (randomization), since a is arbitrary andƒ≠g(ƒ). It also follows that the alternatives, selected at random, areequivalent under transformation (i.e., analogous)—under the image of thearbitrary functional, g.

Abduction results when a (transformed) context is fuzzily matched to asituation, which it does not cover and a question/query is issued.Knowledge is segmented to enable parallel processing as well as tomaximize coherency and thus maximize the creative problem-solvingcapability of the system. New knowledge may replace less usefulknowledge so as to maximize overall system cohesion. Moreover, thepotential for contention on the bus and in memory, in a massivelyparallel architecture, suggests that segments be arranged into localgroups on the basis of physical locality.

Local stacking mechanisms may be used to randomize knowledge. Theacyclic sequence of transformations produced can provide metaphoricalexplanations (with possibilities). These define how the context waschanged in matching (firing) a particular situation—implying aparticular action, in turn.

From the above description of method 10, it is manifest that varioustechniques may be used for implementing the concepts of method 10without departing from the scope of the claims. The describedembodiments are to be considered in all respects as illustrative and notrestrictive. The method/apparatus disclosed herein may be practiced inthe absence of any element that is not specifically claimed and/ordisclosed herein. It should also be understood that method 10 is notlimited to the particular embodiments described herein, but is capableof many embodiments without departing from the scope of the claims.

I claim:
 1. A method for directed mining of a heterogeneous dataset witha computer comprising the steps of: populating a rule base with knownrules, wherein each rule has a context and a situation; populating acase base with known cases, wherein each case has a context and asituation, wherein the case base is partitioned from the rule base, andwherein cases and rules are stored in segments so as to increase theirdomain-specificity across parallel processors; ascribing a naturallanguage semantics to predicates of the known cases and rules; randomlytransforming the known rules and the known cases to form new rules byextracting a maximum number of common predicates; segmenting the rulesand the cases on the basis of shared predicates without makingdistinction between context and situation predicates; abducing newknowledge from the dataset by fuzzily matching the context of a new ruleto a situation the new rule does not cover; calculating a relativepossibility (i) for a given situation and a given context such that the${{{possibility}\mspace{14mu}(i)} = \frac{{{context}\bigcap{situation}_{i}}}{{{context}\bigcap{situation}_{i}}}},$ wherein the possibility (i) ε[0,1]; discarding new rules that have apossibility below a possibility squelch threshold; wherein for a givenprocessor random and symmetric quantum values are dynamically defined,wherein the random quantum defines the amount of time that the givenprocessor may spend in the performance of random search for newknowledge and the symmetric quantum defines the amount of time that thegiven processor may spend in the performance of symmetric search for newknowledge; and issuing a query to a user to supply missing predicates ofthe fuzzy match.
 2. The method of claim 1, further comprisingiteratively mapping the dataset with a learning,natural-language-processing system to yield generalized qualitativedescriptors to replace natural language contexts and situations.
 3. Themethod of claim 1, further comprising the step of providing ametaphorical explanation for each new rule by providing a description ofthe sequence of transformations that led to the new rule.
 4. The methodof claim 1, further comprising the steps of: initializing search usingthe random quantum; terminating the search prior to quantum expiration,if no production is found to be applicable; searching in each processorfor alternates—proportionately favoring either random or symmetricsearch depending on which has the shorter quantum; and updating thequantum values if a new transformed context covers, or fuzzily matchesupon interrupt, any given situation in any given processor, where thepossibility of the combination of the new transformed context and thegiven situation is within the possibility squelch.
 5. The method ofclaim 4, further comprising the step of querying for the status ofunmatched context predicates upon a quantum interrupt.
 6. The method ofclaim 1, further comprising the step of moving successfully fired casesand rules to a logical head of their respective bases.
 7. The method ofclaim 2, further comprising the step of transforming a user-suppliedcontext into a transformed context by randomizing the qualitativedescriptors in the user-supplied context based on common predicates inthe case and rule bases.
 8. The method of claim 1, wherein cases andrules are ranked in order of most to least-recently-used (LRU), andwherein the LRU cases and rules are expunged as part of a policy tomaximize coherency of each segment.
 9. The method of claim 1, whereinsegments and processors are sub-divided into logical groups that arebased on physical locality and migrated using relaxation techniques. 10.A method for directed mining of a heterogeneous dataset comprising thesteps of: dividing the dataset into domain-specific segments, eachsegment stored on a separate processor, wherein each segment comprisescase productions and rule productions that are partitioned into rule andcase bases, and wherein each production comprises a context predicatedby a situation and vice versa; creating a shared symbolic predicateinterpretation lookup table in each segment that includes primitivesymbols and their sequences, context, and situation interpretations;searching a segment by selecting a given production and transforming itby replacing its context with predicate equivalents and then searchingthe group of segments for a situation covered by the transformedcontext; defining random and symmetric quantums for each processor,wherein the random and symmetric quantums represent the exclusive timespent in performing random and symmetric searches respectively in amost-recently-successful rule discovery, per processor; initializingboth quantums in each processor to the same value so as to preservefairness and prevent thrashing; terminating search prior to quantumexpiration if no situation is found to be applicable; alternating searchin each processor between symmetric and random search proportionatelyfavoring the type of search having the shorter quantum, wherein ties arebroken at uniform chance; updating the quantums if the transformedcontext covers, or fuzzily matches upon interrupt, a given situation inone of the processors and if a likelihood of the combination of thetransformed context and the given situation is within a possibilitysquelch, wherein the possibility of the combination of the transformedcontext and the given situation is the product of the possibility ofeach transform in the combination; adding the transformed context andthe covered situation as a new rule to the logical head of the rule baseof those segment(s) having maximal cohesion subject to relation; takingthe cases and/or rules having the highest one-step possibilities, andissuing questions/queries to a user as to the status of their unmatchedsituational predicates if upon timer/quantum interrupt, a completecovering of a situation in a segment is not found; expunging all casesand rules that are found to be in error; expunging theleast-recently-used (LRU) cases and rules in a segment to free storagespace as necessary; maintaining in each segment a local stackingmechanism for excluding cycles in transformation by checking forduplicate states whenever a transformed context and transform is to bestacked; checking the final results of locally acyclic and successfultransformations against the contents of every segment to insure that itis unknown; moving to the tail of its containing segment any transform,which gave rise to a duplicate state; terminating the stacking mechanismupon interrupt, or failure to find a randomization within cumulativelikelihood within the possibility squelch; and providing the acycliccontexts, transformations, and transformed contexts, on the segmentstacks, as sequential metaphorical explanations.
 11. The method of claim10, wherein the cases and rules are separately linked in each segmentthough they share a common LRU link to free space.
 12. The method ofclaim 11, wherein groups of segments are determined by collectingmaximally similar segment, dynamically determined on the heuristic basisof physical locality.
 13. The method of claim 12, wherein the number ofsegments in a group is determined by the number of processors and thecapability for concurrent search among them.
 14. The method of claim 13,wherein a transformed context and covered situation need not only beapplicable, but must reduce the distance between the context and atleast one situation in the case or rule base in symmetrictransformation.